The cool and sometimes wet spring has encourage the dreamsicle-orange flowers of Desert Globemallow, Sphaeralcea ambigua, to perform spectacularly. This pollen-rich, simple-petaled bloom attracts a number of different pollinators, but my honeybees are big fans of the flowers, certainly all-in with the bounty of the beautiful blooms.

Bees land in the blooms, dig in, and roll around the golden glory, exiting the flower with a good sprinkling of pollen as they make their way to other flowers and eventually back to the hive.

The Globemallow is a cool season bloomer, producing its showy flowers until summer’s heat sets in. If a significant June or July rain event occurs, the shrub is happy to deliver another dose of orange crush, much to the pollinators’ appreciation and the gardener’s delight.
All of these globe mallow species are lovely. The one I’ve seen down the coast, around Rockport and Port A, is the woolly globemallow: Sphaeralcea lindheimeri. I love their texture as much as their color, although I’m sure the bees are even more fond of the flowers than I am!
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I’m not sure that I ever saw one of these. The color is so pretty, and the bloom that is opening has an interesting pattern.
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I have long admired this tough, drought tolerant, silvery plant with orange sherbet blooms. It’s a beauty!
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